Earlier this month, the College Football Hall of Fame announced it will be inducting Nick Saban into its ranks later this year. During an appearance on The Pivot Podcast, the former Alabama head coach reflected on his journey to becoming a legend.
Even before trading his coaching whistle for a microphone on ESPN’s College GameDay, Nick Saban was already considered “the G.O.A.T.” — the greatest of all-time — by many college football fans, and not just those located in Tuscaloosa.
Nick Saban explained how Derrick Henry had a steep learning curve in college football after a star-studded career in high school.
After retiring as head Alabama football coach in Jan. 2024, with seven national titles to his name, coaching legend Nick Saban has few regrets. In fact, the 73-year-old has left the door open for a coaching encore.
The National Football Foundation announced the members of the 2025 College Football Hall of Fame class Wednesday, which featured some of the game's greatest coaches and players of all time. The class is headlined by Nick Saban and Urban Meyer among the four coaches selected,
Urban Meyer will join Nick Saban in the 2025 College Football Hall of Fame class. The National Football Foundation announced Saban’s selection last week and the rest of the 18-player, four-coach class on Wednesday.
Nick Saban and Larry Blakeney have been named to the college football class of 2025.
Nick Saban has cemented his status as the greatest college football head coach of the current generation after rewriting the history books during his career on
The Ohio State Buckeyes suffered a major loss on Sunday with defensive coordinator Jim Knowles opting to leave Columbus to take the same position at Penn State.
Former Alabama football coach Nick Saban isn't unretiring. But if he did, he'd prefer the NFL over college, he said on the Pivot Podcast.
Ex-Alabama football coach Nick Saban was asked to name his favorite UA player to coach. But over 17 years, one wasn't enough, so he named these five.
On "The Pat McAfee Show," legendary coach Nick Saban criticized the current state of college football regarding the lack of name, image, and likeness rules. Teams spend millions on NIL like the Ohio State Buckeyes,